Jump to content
 







Main menu
   


Navigation  



Main page
Contents
Current events
Random article
About Wikipedia
Contact us
Donate
 




Contribute  



Help
Learn to edit
Community portal
Recent changes
Upload file
 








Search  

































Create account

Log in
 









Create account
 Log in
 




Pages for logged out editors learn more  



Contributions
Talk
 



















Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Schedule and venues  





2 Teams  





3 Bracket  



3.1  East region  





3.2  Midwest region  





3.3  Mideast region  





3.4  West region  





3.5  Final Four  





3.6  Game summaries  



3.6.1  Final Four  





3.6.2  Championship  









4 Announcers  





5 See also  





6 References  














1978 NCAA Division I basketball tournament






Español
Italiano
 

Edit links
 









Article
Talk
 

















Read
Edit
View history
 








Tools
   


Actions  



Read
Edit
View history
 




General  



What links here
Related changes
Upload file
Special pages
Permanent link
Page information
Cite this page
Get shortened URL
Download QR code
Wikidata item
 




Print/export  



Download as PDF
Printable version
 
















Appearance
   

 






From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


1978 NCAA Division I
basketball tournament
NCAA logo from 1971 to 1979
Season1977–78
Teams32
Finals siteThe Checkerdome
St. Louis, Missouri
ChampionsKentucky Wildcats (5th title, 7th title game,
8th Final Four)
Runner-upDuke Blue Devils (2nd title game,
4th Final Four)
Semifinalists
  • Notre Dame Fighting Irish (1st Final Four)
  • Winning coachJoe B. Hall (1st title)
    MOPJack Givens (Kentucky)
    Attendance447,234
    Top scorerMike Gminski (Duke)
    (109 points)
    NCAA Division I men's tournaments
    «1977 1979»

    The 1978 NCAA Division I basketball tournament involved 32 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. It began on March 11, 1978, and ended with the championship game on March 27 in St. Louis, Missouri. A total of 32 games were played, including a national third-place game.

    The process of seeding the bracket was first used in this tournament. Sixteen conference winners with automatic bids were seeded 1 through 4 in each region. At-large teams were seeded 1 through 4 in each region separately. There were in fact only eleven true at-large teams in the field, as the remaining five were conference winners with automatic bids and seeded as "at-large."[1] The practice of distinguishing between automatic and at-large teams ended with this edition; the expanded field of forty in the 1979 tournament was simply seeded from one to ten in each of the four regions.

    Led by head coach Joe B. Hall, Kentucky won its fifth national title with a 94–88 victory over Duke, coached by Bill Foster. Wildcat forward Jack Givens scored 41 points in the finale and was named the tournament's most outstanding player.[2][3][4][5]

    The bracket's biggest upset came in the first round, when little-heralded Miami (Ohio) defeated defending champion Marquette 84–81 in overtime. The victory was even sweeter for Miami Redskins (now RedHawks) fans as former Marquette coach Al McGuire had earlier strongly criticized the NCAA for potentially matching Marquette against Kentucky in the second round, with Marquette being given a first-round opponent in Miami that was supposedly not even worthy of providing an adequate tune-up game.

    Unranked Cal State Fullerton (CSUF) pulled off two upsets, first over 4th ranked New Mexico (coached by Norm Ellenberger and led by Michael Cooper) and then over top-10 San Francisco (featuring Bill Cartwright). The loss was especially painful for New Mexico as the regional semifinals and finals were held on the Lobos' home court in Albuquerque. CSUF then almost upset Arkansas in the West Regional final, losing by 3 points. In each of the three games, the Titans overcame second-half double-digit deficits. In the Arkansas game, they cut a big deficit to 1 and had the ball with 14 seconds left. But Arkansas' Ron Brewer stripped the ball from Keith Anderson and Jim Counce drove down to hit a clinching layup.

    In the Mideast regional final, Kentucky knocked off Michigan State, led by freshman Earvin "Magic" Johnson. This was the only time in a 4-year period (that included his senior year in high school, 2 years of college, and his rookie NBA season) that Magic's team did not win its final game of the playoffs and hence the championship.

    The Final Four games (semifinals, third-place, and championship) at St. Louis Arena (a.k.a. The Checkerdome) were not played on the arena's official floor. Water damage to it forced the NCAA to borrow the floor from Indiana University's Assembly HallinBloomington.

    This was the fourth and last year for a 32-team bracket; the field expanded to forty teams in 1979 and 48 in 1980, all seeded. The 64-team field debuted in 1985, eliminating byes for the top seeds (1979–1984). The third-place game at the Final Four was last played in 1981.

    Schedule and venues[edit]

    1978 NCAA Division I basketball tournament is located in the United States
    Charlotte

    Charlotte

    Philadelphia

    Philadelphia

    Tulsa

    Tulsa

    Knoxville

    Knoxville

    Wichita

    Wichita

    Indianapolis

    Indianapolis

    Eugene

    Eugene

    Tempe

    Tempe

    1978 sites for first round games
    1978 NCAA Division I basketball tournament is located in the United States
    Providence

    Providence

    Dayton

    Dayton

    Lawrence

    Lawrence

    Albuquerque

    Albuquerque

    St. Louis

    St. Louis

    1978 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red)

    The following are the sites that were selected to host each round of the 1978 tournament:

    First round

    Regional semifinals and finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)

    National semifinals, 3rd-place game, and championship (Final Four and championship)

    Teams[edit]

    Region Seed Team Coach Conference Finished Final Opponent Score
    East
    East 1Q Duke Bill E. Foster Atlantic Coast Runner Up Kentucky L 94–88
    East 3Q Furman Joe Williams Southern Round of 32 Indiana L 63–62
    East 1L Indiana Bob Knight Big Ten Sweet Sixteen Villanova L 61–60
    East 4L La Salle Paul Westhead East Coast Round of 32 Villanova L 103–97
    East 4Q Penn Bob Weinhauer Ivy League Sweet Sixteen Duke L 84–80
    East 3L Rhode Island Jack Kraft Independent Round of 32 Duke L 63–62
    East 2L St. Bonaventure Jim Satalin Independent Round of 32 Penn L 92–83
    East 2Q Villanova Rollie Massimino Eastern Athletic Regional Runner-up Duke L 90–72
    Mideast
    Mideast 4L Florida State Hugh Durham Metropolitan Round of 32 Kentucky L 85–76
    Mideast 1Q Kentucky Joe B. Hall Southeastern Champion Duke W 94–88
    Mideast 1L Marquette Hank Raymonds Independent Round of 32 Miami (OH) L 84–81
    Mideast 3Q Miami (OH) Darrell Hedric Mid-American Sweet Sixteen Kentucky L 91–69
    Mideast 2Q Michigan State Jud Heathcote Big Ten Regional Runner-up Kentucky L 52–49
    Mideast 3L Providence Dave Gavitt Independent Round of 32 Michigan State L 77–63
    Mideast 2L Syracuse Jim Boeheim Independent Round of 32 Western Kentucky L 87–86
    Mideast 4Q Western Kentucky Jim Richards Ohio Valley Sweet Sixteen Michigan State L 90–69
    Midwest
    Midwest 3Q Creighton Tom Apke Missouri Valley Round of 32 DePaul L 80–78
    Midwest 1L DePaul Ray Meyer Independent Regional Runner-up Notre Dame L 84–64
    Midwest 4Q Houston Guy Lewis Southwest Round of 32 Notre Dame L 100–77
    Midwest 2Q Louisville Denny Crum Metropolitan Sweet Sixteen DePaul L 90–89
    Midwest 1Q Missouri Norm Stewart Big Eight Round of 32 Utah L 86–79
    Midwest 2L Notre Dame Digger Phelps Independent Fourth Place Arkansas L 71–69
    Midwest 4L St. John's Lou Carnesecca Independent Round of 32 Louisville L 76–68
    Midwest 3L Utah Jerry Pimm Western Athletic Sweet Sixteen Notre Dame L 69–56
    West
    West 2L Arkansas Eddie Sutton Southwest Third Place Notre Dame W 71–69
    West 4L Cal State Fullerton Bobby Dye Pacific Coast Regional Runner-up Arkansas L 61–58
    West 3L Kansas Ted Owens Big Eight Round of 32 UCLA L 83–76
    West 2Q New Mexico Norm Ellenberger Western Athletic Round of 32 Cal State Fullerton L 90–85
    West 1L North Carolina Dean Smith Atlantic Coast Round of 32 San Francisco L 68–64
    West 3Q San Francisco Bob Gaillard West Coast Sweet Sixteen Cal State Fullerton L 75–72
    West 1Q UCLA Gary Cunningham Pacific-8 Sweet Sixteen Arkansas L 74–70
    West 4Q Weber State Neil McCarthy Big Sky Round of 32 Arkansas L 73–52

    Bracket[edit]

    * – Denotes overtime period

    East region[edit]

    Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
             
    1Q Duke 63
    3L Rhode Island 62
    1Q Duke 84
    4Q Penn 80
    4Q Penn 92
    2L St. Bonaventure 83
    1Q Duke 90
    2Q Villanova 72
    1L Indiana 63
    3Q Furman 62
    1L Indiana 60
    2Q Villanova 61
    2Q Villanova 103
    4L La Salle 97

    Midwest region[edit]

    Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
             
    3L Utah 86
    1Q Missouri 79**
    3L Utah 56
    2L Notre Dame 69
    2L Notre Dame 100
    4Q Houston 77
    2L Notre Dame 84
    1L DePaul 64
    1L DePaul 80
    3Q Creighton 78
    1L DePaul 90
    2Q Louisville 89**
    2Q Louisville 76
    4L St. John's 68

    Mideast region[edit]

    Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
             
    1Q Michigan State 77
    3L Providence 63
    1Q Michigan State 90
    4Q Western Kentucky 69
    4Q Western Kentucky 87
    2L Syracuse 86*
    1Q Michigan State 49
    2Q Kentucky 52
    3Q Miami (OH) 84
    1L Marquette 81*
    3Q Miami (OH) 69
    2Q Kentucky 91
    2Q Kentucky 85
    4L Florida State 76

    West region[edit]

    Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
             
    1Q UCLA 83
    3L Kansas 76
    1Q UCLA 70
    2L Arkansas 74
    2L Arkansas 73
    4Q Weber State 52
    2L Arkansas 61
    4L Cal State Fullerton 58
    3Q San Francisco 68
    1L North Carolina 64
    3Q San Francisco 72
    4L Cal State Fullerton 75
    4L Cal State Fullerton 90
    2Q New Mexico 85

    Final Four[edit]

    National semifinals
    Saturday, March 25
    National Championship Game
    Monday, March 27
          
    E1Q Duke 90
    MW2L Notre Dame 86
    E1Q Duke 88
    ME2Q Kentucky 94
    ME2Q Kentucky 64
    W2L Arkansas 59National third-place game
    MW2L Notre Dame 69
    W2L Arkansas 71

    Q = automatic qualifier bid L = at-large bid (including 5 automatic bids seeded with at-large teams)

    Game summaries[edit]

    Final Four[edit]

    NBC

    March 25

    Box/Recap

    #5 Arkansas Razorbacks 59, #1 Kentucky Wildcats 64
    Scoring by half: 30–32, 29–32
    Pts: Ron Brewer16
    Rebs: Marvin Delph8
    Asts: Jim Counce 2
    Pts: Jack Givens23
    Rebs: Jack Givens 9
    Asts: Jay Shidler 4

    The Checkerdome, St. Louis, Missouri
    Attendance: 18,721

    NBC

    March 25

    Box/Recap

    #7 Duke Blue Devils 90, #6 Notre Dame Fighting Irish 86
    Scoring by half: 43–29, 47–57
    Pts: Mike Gminski29
    Rebs: Gene Banks12
    Asts: Jim Spanarkel/Bob Bender5
    Pts: Duck Williams16
    Rebs: Bill Laimbeer10
    Asts: Rich Branning 5

    The Checkerdome, St. Louis, Missouri
    Attendance: 18,721

    Championship[edit]

    NBC

    March 27

    Box/Recap

    #7 Duke Blue Devils 88, #1 Kentucky Wildcats 94
    Scoring by half: 38-45, 50-49
    Pts: Gene Banks 22
    Rebs: Mike Gminski 12
    Pts: Jack Givens 41
    Rebs: Rick Robey11

    The Checkerdome, St. Louis, Missouri
    Attendance: 18,721

    Announcers[edit]

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ Washington Post – March 6, 1978
  • ^ "Kentucky finally gets to celebrate". Deseret News. (Salt Lake City, Utah). UPI. March 28, 1978. p. 4B.
  • ^ "Kentucky can finally celebrate". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). wire services. March 28, 1978. p. 1C.
  • ^ Keith, Larry (April 3, 1978). "The Cats go wild". Sports Illustrated. p. 18.
  • ^ "Givens heads team". Kentucky New Era. (Hopkinsville). Associated Press. March 28, 1978. p. 12.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1978_NCAA_Division_I_basketball_tournament&oldid=1226971002"

    Categories: 
    NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament
    197778 NCAA Division I men's basketball season
    1978 in sports in Missouri
    March 1978 sports events in the United States
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Use mdy dates from August 2023
     



    This page was last edited on 2 June 2024, at 21:37 (UTC).

    Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.



    Privacy policy

    About Wikipedia

    Disclaimers

    Contact Wikipedia

    Code of Conduct

    Developers

    Statistics

    Cookie statement

    Mobile view



    Wikimedia Foundation
    Powered by MediaWiki